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  • 7/25/2019 Sound and Vibration Tutorial En

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    Sound and Vibration Measurements: How-To Guide

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    Overview

    This document is part of the centralized resource portal.How-To Guide for Most Common Measurements

    Table of Contents

    Sound and Vibration and Piezoelectric (IEPE) Sensor Overview

    How to Make a Sound and Vibration Measurement

    NI Solutions for Sound and Vibration Measurements

    Connecting Your Sensor to an Instrument

    Recommended Hardware and Software

    Sound and Vibration Webcasts, Tutorials, and Other How-To Resources

    Sound and Vibration and Piezoelectric (IEPE) Sensor Overview

    Vibration occurs when a mass oscillates mechanically about

    an equilibrium point. A common example of a vibrating

    mechanical system is a spring-mass-damper system, illustrated in

    Figure 1. Vibrations also occur in surfaces, such as the wing of an

    airplane, or a gong. In many cases, vibrations are unwanted

    because they waste energy and cause fatigue stress and noise,

    and systems are usually designed to minimize these types ofvibrations. Meanwhile, vibrating structures generate pressure

    waves, or sound, which can be desirable in the case of musical

    instruments.

    View a 60-second video about

    how to take a Sound

    and Vibration Measurement

    Figure 1. Spring-Mass-Damper System

    Sound and vibration are essentially oscillations in different media, and just like vibrations can create sound, acoustic waves traveling through air can generate oscillations in solid materials as weBecause the theory behind the two is correlated, measuring sound and vibration is also similar in nature.

    You can represent both sound and vibration as oscil lations, and the simplest osci llations are sinusoidal waveforms expressed in terms of time as , with angular frequen

    and phase as constants. Angular frequency is represented in radians per second (rad/sec) and is related to frequency (Hz or s ) by the following formula: = . Angular frequency is -1 2

    always spoken of in correlation to a phase , which describes an offset of the wave from a specified reference point at the initial time , and is usually given in degrees or radians. t0

    Analysis of Sound and Vibration Measurements

    In real applications, the measured voltage signals are complex waveforms that contain multiple frequency components. Sound and vibration analysis usually involves identifying and examining

    these frequency components. To do so, you must convert the signals from the time domain to the frequency domain mathematically using Laplace, Z-, or Fourier transforms. Fourier analysis is t

    most common for this application because it obtains the magnitude in decibels (dB) and associated phase (degrees or radian) for each frequency component in a signal.

    IEPE Sensors

    Typical indicators for making sound and vibration measurements are acceleration and sound pressure level, respectively. These indicators are commonly measured using devices such as

    accelerometers (shock and vibration) and microphones (sound).

    Many sensors for measuring acceleration and pressure are based on the principle of piezoelectric generation. The piezoelectric effect denotes the ability of ceramic or quartz crystals to generate

    electric potential upon experiencing compressive stresses. These mechanical stresses are triggered by forces such as acceleration, strain, or pressure. In the case of microphones, acoustic

    pressure waves cause a diaphragm, or thin membrane, to vibrate and transfer stresses into the surrounding piezoelectric crystals. Accelerometers, on the other hand, contain a seismic mass tha

    directly applies forces to the surrounding crystals in response to shock and vibrations. The voltage generated is proportional to the internal stresses in the crystals.

    A particular class of piezoelectric sensors, known by the term integral electronic piezoelectric (IEPE), incorporates an amplifier in its design next to the piezoelectric crystals. Because the charge

    produced by a piezoelectric transducer is very small, the electrical signal produced by the sensor is susceptible to no ise, and you must use sensitive electronics to amplify and condition the signa

    and reduce the output impedance. IEPE therefore makes the logical step of integrating the sensitive electronics as close as possible to the transducer to ensure better noise immunity and more

    convenient packaging. A typical IEPE sensor is powered by an external constant current source and modulates its output voltage with respect to the varying charge on the piezoelectric crystal. T

    IEPE sensor uses only one or two wires fo r both sensor excitation (current) and signal ou tput (voltage).

    How to Make a Sound and Vibration Measurement

    The signal conditioning circuitry for measuring sound and vibration is fairly straightforward. A typical system for measuring acceleration or sound pressure level includes the following components

    Sensor

    Current source to excite the sensor

    :Document Type Tutorial

    : YesNI Supported

    : May 17, 2012Publish Date

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    Proper grounding to eliminate noise pick-up

    AC coupling to remove DC offsets in the system

    An instrumentation amplifier to boost the sensors signal level

    A lowpass filter to reduce noise and prevent aliasing in the data acquisition system

    Simultaneous sample and hold circuitry to keep multiple signals properly timed with respect to each other

    As mentioned in the above section, sound and vibration measurements are highly susceptible to noise. You can reduce this effect, however, by properly grounding the system. You can avoid

    improper grounding resulting from ground loops or floating nodes by ensuring that either the signal conditioning input or the sensor is grounded but not both. If the sensor is grounded, you must

    connect it differentially. If the sensor is floating, you should connect the signal conditioning systems inverting input to ground.

    The signal acquired from the sensor consists of both DC and AC components, where the DC portion offsets the AC portion from zero. AC coupling removes the DC offset in the system by means

    a capacitor in series with the signal. An AC-coupled sensor system eliminates the long-term DC drift that sensors have due to age and temperature effect, dramatically increasing the resolution a

    the usable dynamic range of the system.

    For accurate measurements, the sampling rate of the system should be at least twice the frequency of the signals being acquired. To be sure that you are sampling the correct range of frequenc

    add a lowpass filter before the sampler and the analog-to-digital converter. This ensures that you attenuate higher-frequency noise and that these aliasing components above the sampling rate d

    not distort the measurement.

    NI Solutions for Sound and Vibration Measurements

    Sound and Vibration measurements are common but the application requirements can vary. Therefore, National Instruments provides many options covering multiple hardware families.

    Figure 2. Examples of NI CompactDAQ, PXI, and SCXI Systems

    The CompactDAQ family is ideal for low- to medium-channel count applications. It can provide IEPE compatible excitation and moderate sampling rates.

    The PXI platform provides solutions for medium- to high-channel count systems with the ability to trigger and synchronize across multiple modules. The PXI platform also provides IEPE excitatio

    with higher sampling rates and multiple selectable input ranges.

    The SCXI family can also provide modules for medium-channel count applications at lower sampling speeds.

    Connecting Your Sensor to an Instrument

    As an example, consider the C Series module that is designed for accelerometer and microphone measurements (see Figure 3). The NI 9234 can simultaneously sample four analog inpNI 9234

    at 51.2 kS/s while offering software-selectable IEPE signal conditioning, AC/DC coupling, and antialiasing filtering. The NI 9234 can be used in an chassis.NI cDAQ-9172

    Figure 3. NI 9234 C Series Module with NI CompactDAQ Chassis

    The module has four BNC connectors that can each connect to an IEPE sensor (see Figure 4). The center pin of the connector, AI+, provides the DC excitation and AC signal connection. The sh

    of the connector, AI, provides the excitation return path and AC signal ground reference.

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    Figure 4. NI 9234 BNC Connector Assignments

    An IEPE sensor needs an appropriate cable and/or connector to hook into the BNC inputs of the C Series module. Triaxial accelerometers have three outputs, one axis to one acquisition channe

    each requiring its own signal conditioning.

    You can connect both ground-referenced or floating IEPE sensors to the NI 9234, but you must use a floating connection to prevent ground noise from being picked up. Typical IEPE sensors hav

    a case that is electrically isolated from the IEPE electronics, so connecting the sensor to the NI 9234 results in a floating connection even though the case of the sensor is grounded.

    Getting to See Your Measurement: NI LabVIEW

    Once you have configured the system properly, you can acquire and visualize data using the LabVIEW graphical programming environment (see Figure 5).

    In software, you can covert the acquired voltage into frequency data through spectral (frequency-domain) analysis functions. A simple example is a fast Fourier transform, or FFT function. You caconduct more advanced software processing of the data using one of the many tools that National Instruments has to offer, such as the .NI Sound and Vibration Measurement Suite

    Figure 5. Power Spectrum with NI Sound and Vibration Toolkit

    Recommended Hardware and Software

    Example Sound and Vibration Measurement System

    NI CompactDAQ: 3-minute out of the box video

    Take a Virtual Tour of NI CompactDAQ

    Learn about and test-drive LabVIEW software for free

    Sound and Vibration Webcasts, Tutorials, and Other How-To Resources

    10 Questions to Ask When Selecting Your Sound and Vibration Measurement System

    Sound and Vibration Interactive Application Tutorials, Product Demos, and Case Studies

    New to Sound and Vibration? New Online Instructor-Led Training From NI Available

    Legal

    This tutorial (this "tutorial") was developed by National Instruments ("NI"). Although technical support of this tutorial may be made available by National Instruments, the content in this tu torial ma

    not be completely tested and verified, and NI does not guarantee its quality in any way or that NI will continue to support this content with each new revision of related products and drivers. THIS

    TUTORIAL IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND AND SUBJECT TO CERTAIN RESTRICTIONS AS MORE SPECIFICALLY SET FORTH IN NI.COM'S TERMS OF US

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